uh yeah i awoke them by stepping on it by accident and got stung looked back and there was 100 of em i ran like a biatch sssss.then a dog with a group walked up on em and quickly retreated stung up . they must feel safe there with tommy

tufluk wrote:You call the beekeeper, I don't have his number. I'm not willing to risk a kid (or adult) going into anaphylactic shock over a few bees. I'm spraying (have sprayed) when I see them.

Really? No qualms about disregarding peoples safety in the name of wringing out every last spec of 2nd amend "rights" in the gun debate, but find bees too dangerous to drop a dime on? Bees are truly indispensible, and are dying at an alarming rate.

Seriously, we should call the city. I bet they have a line on a bee guy of some type.

Exactly what danger to the public safety arises from my lawful ownership, and use of firearms? And/or my support of the second amendment? Ask our crew about the danger of working on the course and stumbling upon a nest of ground bees. To some, a sting in the woods without an epi pen can mean real trouble. The issue of colony collapse has nothing to do with eliminating an occasional nest of ground bees on a disc golf course, and only an imbecile could somehow bring the second amendment into this discussion. Unless, of course, you consider a can of Raid to be a firearm.

To be honest, I really expected you to compare me with Assad for my use of chemical weapons.